Cyberspace As Battleground Ask about our NORTHWEST AIRLINES Wont])Pam/Miles Above Promotion Politicians here and in Israel are turning cyberspace into yet another partisan battleground. Recently, Likud leader Benyamin Netanyahu and Labor Party official Nissim Zvili held separate high-tech dialogues on CompuServe's "Israel Forum." Despite a few technical glitches, the sessions allowed participants from around the world to ques- tion the two politicos and express their own views about the Mideast peace process. More than 700 participants heard the Likud leader — who Applegate Square Southfield 354-4560 REAR ENDS Dueling Rabbis Part II FINAL 'DAYS! 60-75% OFF ALL SUMMER CLEARANCE MERCHANDISE "On The Boardwalk" Orchard Lake Road South Of Maple 810-626-4333 See What's in Store! Cf) UJ FABULOUS SHOPS IN ONE PERFECT LOCATION! SHIRT 30X Men's furnishings and accessories 19011 West Ten Mile Road Southfield, Michigan 48075 (Between Southfield and Evergreen) 352-1080 w Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Thursday 9:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Orchard Lake Road • North of Maple • West Bloomfield PARKING AND ENTRANCE IN REAR w LLJ 68 Advertising in the Jewish News gets results. Place your ad today! Call (810) 354-6060 tiers groups on the West Bank. "The responsibility of their security is on the Israeli govern- ment," he said. "In spite of that, we are very worried of their irre- sponsible behavior, which casts a heavy shadow on the demo- cratic regime in Israel." The CompuServe Israel Forum plans additional electronic town meetings featuring the likes of Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and Jerusalem Mayor Ehud Olmert in the near future. In this country, Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa, the long-shot GOP presidential contender and the only Jew in the race, has an- nounced the opening of a World Wide Web "Homepage," which will allow Internet users to browse biographical information and key elements of his platform. Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., another contender, also is on "the Web." "The American public wants substance and not just sound bites," Mr. Lugar said. Benyamin Netanyahu signed on with his nickname, Bibi — express his misgivings about the upcoming Israeli withdraw- al from more West Bank terri- tory. One participant modemed in from Israel's northern border, the target of Katyusha rocket attacks in recent weeks. In response to a question, Mr. Netanyahu said he would "nego- tiate differently with Syria. I would come into the negotiations demanding precisely what Syria is demanding ... the entire Golan Heights. And why not? After all, we were the aggrieved party." The Likud leader said that the experiment in high-tech dialogue was a rousing success. Mr. Zvili, secretary general of the Labor Party, drew somewhat fewer cybernauts. In response to questions about the Golan Heights, Mr. Zvili said that "the Middle East has changed its face; the interests of the Syrian and Israeli people lead them to a conclusion that peace is the most significant element in securing the future." He suggested that strategic territory is not as critical as it once was in an era of missile and nonconventional warfare. He also had something to say about recent protests by set- The Battle of the Rabbis took another turn when a group rep- resenting rabbis from all four movements of Judaism came to Washington to promote the Rabin government's peace policies. In a letter to Congress, the ad- hoc group pressed for renewal of the Middle East Peace Facilita- tion Act, the law allowing Amer- ican aid to the Palestinian Authority, and expressed support for an active American role in the negotiations. The rabbinic gathering came a month after a group of Ortho- dox rabbis staged a lobbying effort to oppose any American aid to the Palestinian Authority. "The point was to show that a small handful of mostly Ortho- dox rabbis are NOT representa- tive of the broad cross-section of American Jewry," said Rabbi Sid- ney Schwarz, a Reconstruction- ist leader from the Washington area. "Our effort, representing more than 600 rabbis spanning religious movements, shows what polls show — that something like 80 percent of American Jews sup- port Rabin and the peace process, and support active American in- volvement." The delegation met with a number of congressional leaders, including Rep. Ben Gilman, R- N.Y., and Sen. Jesse Helms, R- N.C. ❑